Mortgage
and credit card companies under the spotlight on consumer charging
Released on
= July 28, 2005, 9:11 am
Press Release
Author = Richard Green
Industry = Financial
Press Release
Summary = UK debtors receive boost as housing market shows signs
of improvement and credit card companies warned to reduce charges
Press Release
Body = For the first time since May 1996 reports have indicated
that wage increases have risen faster than house price inflation.
According to
Nationwide, "The overall picture remains one of a gently softening
market".
The signs indicate
that the housing market activity is finally starting to pick up,
with estate agents reporting that buyers have begun returning to
the market and sellers are more willing to negotiate on prices,
however transaction levels are still reported to be low compared
with last year. This represents good news for buyers looking to
get a property, however it stands in stark contrast to findings
from the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) ( www.cml.org.uk/ ) showing
that the number of homes being repossessed has risen for the first
time in seven years, from
3,070 six months ago up to 4,640 for the first half of 2005.
The sharp rise
in home repossession applications by lenders adds to growing concerns
that consumers are struggling with debt. Ed Stansfield of Capital
Economics, said, "Today's figures show that for a small but
growing minority of borrowers levels of
debt have become a problem, despite historically low interest rates.”
These figures for repossessions were still, according to the CML,
"extremely low" compared with the early 1990s; however
adverse credit, arrears and repossessions look set to rise.
Richard Brown,
Chief Executive of personal finance comparison site Moneynet ( http://www.moneynet.co.uk
) is disappointed to recently see, in light of a possible base rate
cut, which would help to ease the burden of mortgage debt within
the housing market that, “many lenders are taking this opportunity
to increase their margins at the expense of their loyal savers by
reducing their fixed savings rates by more than the mortgage rates”.
The personal
debt problems of the nation have also not been helped by the punitive
charging activities of several of the major lenders.
The Office of
Fair Trading (OFT) ( http://www.oft.gov.uk/ ) has warned eight of
the
major credit card firms regarding their activities towards customers
who miss payment deadlines or exceed credit limits, and ordered
them to reduce their
“excessive” and "disproportionately high"
charges, usually in excess of £20 per transgression, to consumers
or face being taken to court.
There are currently
30.6 million people in the UK possessing at least one credit card,
with a total of almost £60 billion owed on them.
The credit card
firms have defended the need for late payment charges claiming that
their use was fair, "Only a very small proportion of customers
attract a default charge and as a responsible lender we must have
a process in place to manage late payments," a spokeswoman
for RBS maintained. Which? have determined that as many as one in
four cardholders have been subject to some form of default charge
being imposed on them within the past six months. With the number
of people accruing charges, the credit firms have admitted they
are able to make £400 million a year from default charges
alone, and Barclaycard has admitted that 43 per cent of its
operating income is generated from these fees.
The OFT have
said that the sum being charged by companies is far in excess of
the actual costs to the card firms, for late payment. "The
levels of the default charges imposed by the credit card companies
need to be reduced in order to be fair".
Which? have
seen the announcement by the OFT over the credit card penalty charges
not being fair, and the threats of court action as, “great
news”, but also wants other situations where banks hit customers
with unfair charges to also be looked into.
The Chief Executive
of Money Advice Scotland, Yvonne Gallacher, said of the prospect
of reduced credit card fees: "This would make a big difference
to the thousands of low-income credit cardholders who struggle to
pay off these fees and charges."
Moneynet is
not so optimistic for consumers, and advises for caution following
the OFT announcement, warning that credit card companies may be
looking to increase their profits via alternative ‘stealth’
charges, “We are concerned that credit card providers may
simply attempt to recoup their lost income via higher charges for
all…Moneynet recommends credit card customers consider their
options before taking
out a card -and take into account all charges as well as the headline
interest rate”, said Richard Brown.
Some moves seem
to be getting made to help those most at risk, but these measures
seem to be mainly driven by increased levels of consumer dissatisfaction,
and while house prices still look expensive compared with incomes,
the worst off may not feel a huge change in their circumstances
for some time to come.
Released by
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